Friday, April 12, 2013

Artist Post

Chris Spooner 
Chris Spooner, born and raised in Sheffield, UK, is a graphic and web designer who got his passion for art by building robots out of cardboard boxes. He chose subjects like Art and Design as his main focus throughout his education and eventually began working in the field as a graphic and web designer. He has created Spoon Graphics, one the most creative web design portfolios out there, and also has two blogs: Blog.SpoonGraphics, which gave him his fame, and Line25, where he continues his documentations of all of his designs. 
Despite his education in Art and Design, most of his works are now based on self-teaching and experimentation. He uses what he learns to write very helpful and creative tutorials on his blogs, which are the majority of his work right now. Spooner's tutorials have become very popular and has created a high demand for more work from him, keeping him very busy. His pieces are very colorful and energetic  which I believe makes him so popular with young designers. 

I find Spooner's works to be very captivating and well designed  He puts a lot of time into making every piece just right and I admire him for that. He says that he will have days where he is feeling really creative and get so much done, and other days where he will get nothing done. In a way, I feel like we have that in common because I know I will put off a project when I can't think of anything creative to do but then I'll have a spurt of inspiration and get a lot done. Overall, I like Spooner's designs and concepts because they are very lively and eye-catching. He has a very quirky and lively personality which can be seen in his pieces and makes them unique and awesome. 

Monday, April 1, 2013

Artist Talk

Natalia Gonzalez 
Natalia Gonzalez is a Bolivian artist currently working in Santa Cruz, Bolivia and Pittsburgh, PA, two extremely different places. She has a licentiate in Fine Arts, a MFA in studio art, and a Certificate in the College Teaching of Art. Her interests are focused on time and space because they are a complex continuum that are interdisciplinary. She says that events exist at a particular time in space, which I believe she tries to capture in her works. Her take on art is not of the traditional type, but instead it can be classified as raw and new because she lets chance and interruptions, boundaries and delimiting, placement and temporality, and improvisational comprise her pieces.
 I found Natalia's works to be refreshing and interesting because they aren't the epitome of what you would think "art" would be, but she makes them pieces of art by allowing the time and space of the surroundings work in harmony. She uses mirrors, video cameras, screens and other everyday objects to create her pieces, which gives it a natural and raw effect. I like how she talked about chance and interruptions because in my opinion, a work of art is really created by chance or by interruption. It just happens. Too much planning can make the piece seem to rigid or boring. So, her commenting on those ideas exemplifies that she allows for them to happen and make her art even better. Even though her art isn't traditional, I still think it deserves its gratification because Gonzalez eliminates physical boundaries and lets time and space work naturally together to make an outstanding and interesting work of art.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Vito Acconci Reading

I thought Vito Acconci's "Public Space in Private Time" was a very contradictory and confusing reading because the ideas he talked about were bizarre and hard to relate to. In section 12 he states that "public space is an analogue for sex" and that's all people pretty much think about, which is kind of ridiculous to draw conclusions on. Also, just the way he words his sentences creates confusion and they sound repetitive. For example, in section 18, Vito says "the built environment is built because it's been allowed to be built," which kind of over exemplifies what he is trying to say because of the way he worded it. Overall, I thought it was very hard to follow Acconci's piece because it was composed of strange ideas and was hard to relate to  real life.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Artist Post #4

Giulia Balladore 

Giula Balladore is a hyperrealistic vector artist who lives and works in Italy. Inspired by her father, she has self-taught herself everything she knows and started experimenting, by chance, in digital art when she bought her PC in 2002. She uses Adobe Flash to bring alive her hand-drawings of portraits that look so realistic it gives an imaginative quality to her pieces. Much of he inspiration comes from the simple beauty within women, fashion, and just what strikes her attention the most. 


Balladore's works are astonishingly detailed and super realistic, showing true human nature and the simplicity of it. She will start by sketching the drawing, then it will get scanned and opened in Flash. From there, she will trace it, add color and then add many layers; she says the more layers her piece will have, the better it will turn out. Her technique allows her to manipulate and change her original sketch without losing the quality of the piece. Balladore says "My work is mainly focused on female portraits for the simple reason that for me the purest and simplest beauty stands in the look of a woman, with all of her imperfections and boundaries." This shows that she wants to capture the raw and simpleness of human nature within her work, but the added effect of vectors gives it an extra imaginative, artistic feel. 

I find her works to be breathtakingly inspiring because she takes plain sketches and turns them into these masterpieces that portray the simple beauty of the people she draws. The pure elegance that shows through her pieces makes you attracted to it and you can't seem to look away. Also, at first glance you think it is a photograph because it is so realistic and relatable. She does a superb job at getting the lighting, expression and detail just right to make it look so life-like. It is also very admiring because she has self-taught herself how to do these masterpieces, which shows that she has a great passion for the work she does. 

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Artist Post #3

Pascal Dombis 

"Topo"

Born in 1965, Pascal Dombis is a digital artist who uses computers and algorithms to create the images of repeating and complex designs from algorithm rules. Thus, his pieces are never planned, he just lets the algorithms go through a series of interactions. Typically, no piece would exactly be the same because the algorithms produce unpredictable results. He gained a engineering degree from Insa University but he also spent a year at Tufts University studying computer art classes, starting his usage of algorithms in his art. At first, he only used simplistic rules, like a straight line, but then he started to use digital help to create these abstract and wild works. Now, he lives and works in Paris.
"Eurasia
Dombis' works evoke a struggle between the orderly control of simple rules and the randomness that follows when the rules are put together. Anyway the piece ends up, it always is visually stunning and stimulating because the eye is constantly moving through out the work. In the series that "Topo" is from, Dombis focused on the idea of opening and closing geometric shapes. Continually adding more and more curves, the pieces evolved into out of control hyper structures that were integrated to look like architectural structures. 

In the series "Eurasia", Dombis wanted to convey how the internet is a major contributor to how we perceive the world, so he put together Google search image results of the words red, blue, black and white into a digital collage. The two halves compare the results from European and Asian Google pages and the collage comes together with the help of a random algorithm. The perspective changes and which side is which is determined by the viewer, but there is a clear distinction between the motives of both halves. Also, the movement of the piece helps attract the viewer and makes them stay interested. 

All in all, I really find Pascal's works to be really interesting and awesome. The idea that someone can take a simple algorithm and turn it into this complex and wild piece of art is astonishing. To make unpredictable work but to have it convey his message so successfully is inspiring because he doesn't know what the final project will look like. When I look at his work, I find myself thinking I'm lost in some crazy world trying to make sense of what is going on because he has set his work apart from others that give it such an original and unbelievable effect. Although Dombis is the one creating these pieces, the machine creates the rule but then the art work just goes on to create itself, taking on its own life per say. 

Monday, February 11, 2013

Artist Talk

Light in Flux: Glenn Shrum

Originally trained as an architecture, Glenn Shrum has turned his passion for light into an artistic profession. He currently lives in Baltimore, MD but teaches at Parsons The New School for Design School of Constructed Environments in New York City. He believes that light is something more than just an artificial source for brightness but instead a "sensory phenomenon" that is meant to be experienced first hand through the eye. Shrum highlighted three major aspects of lighting that he uses in his works that allow light to impact people and space and they are flux, visual space, and the uncommon place. 

Flux means the change in light over time and many of Shrum's projects focus on emphasizing the change in natural light, which are refreshing because people are used to fixed, artificial light nowadays. The flux in light helps reveal depth, transparency and other aspects of an object not visible without light. 


Visual Space is perceived through the difference between direct and peripheral vision. With the presence of light, the grand space of a place can changed thus allowing for certain parts to be seen or for the whole peripheral space to be noticed. Visual space with added light manipulates how people see space and usually creates distance. 

The uncommon place means that light can be found in unexpected places, therefore making it special. People are used to the fixed, artificial light and don't tend to notice light in uncommon places, like light being reflected off of a car. Thus, lighting designs help expand the perceptual field and get people to appreciate light in their most aesthetic and natural ways. 

I find Shrum's works very inspirational and interesting because he takes a medium as simple as lighting and turns into art. I really enjoyed listening to him talk about how he creates these pieces and I had no idea that there was so much planning and work that went into them. Also, I really liked how he had a passion for his work and stressed that people should take in the uncommon light because it really is special. I believe Shrum shows that people can create anything artistic with anything as long as they have a passion for what they do. 

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Artist Post #2

Alberto Seveso 



Alberto Seveso is a graphic illustrator/designer that has created this technique called "sperm shaping" by using black and white photos with a blending of vectors on Photoshop. He was born in Milan, Italy but grew up on the island of Sardinian with no education in design or art. He has self-taught himself through using an Amiga 1200, Delux Paint and becoming a street artist. He began his career as a graphic designer when he moved to Rome and started using Photoshop, which amazed him of its capabilities. Seveso's "sperm  shaping" was born by a collection meant as a joke, but people really took a liking to it so he kept going with that inspiration.


The photos become Seveso's medium and the basis of his artwork. He creates these swirly vectors and layers them onto the photo, adding tasteful and sometimes sensual effects. There is a mystery to his works as well because he plays with what to hide and what to show, allowing the viewer to get lost into the picture and   imagine what is there and what isn't. He assembles the vectors in Photoshop, making them more realistic and giving them depth, and  follows the curves of the body or face to make it more authentic and life-like. Seveso says it is a very tedious technique but quite simple, it just requires patient to make the vectors and bit-map picture harmonious.

Seveso's works are very intriguing and captivating. The blending of vectors on black and white photos really brings out the patterns he creates, which usually look like sperm. The idea of "sperm shaping" is kind of strange but it does create this abstract and awesome picture that really pushes the limits of the mind. At first though, I didn't even pick up that most of the patterns looked like sperm until I read about his works and style. Also, his ability to become such an established artist with no degree in design or art, really shows that anybody can do whatever they set their mind to if they have the passion and dedication for their work. I agree with Seveso that you don't need a degree to be successful in art, although design schools do teach the fundamentals. I believe that creative expression comes from within and Seveso definitely proves that by making these amazing works.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Photoshop Editing

Before:
After:

To make this photo better, I used brightness/contrast, levels, curves, exposure, vibrance and hue/saturation. I had to get rid of a lot of the red in the photo and make it brighter so you could actually see the other colors that are in it.

Monday, January 28, 2013

24-Hour Technology Log

I had to work the volleyball tournament from 7:30 to 1, so my  use of technology probably wasn't as high as usual.

6:50- Woke up to alarm.
7:04- Checked the time.
7:25- Checked time again. Need to start heading over to gym.
7:47- Checked time yet again. It is going to be a long day.
8:23-8:47- Texting.
8:49- Got on Facebook and played some Jewel Mania.
8:54- New text.
9:00- Watched a video on YouTube and browsed on Tumblr.
9:10-10:10- Texting
10:12- Downloaded Bejeweled and played some because working the concession stand at this tournament can be boring.
10:47- New Text.
10:50- Started to prep the hot dogs on the hot dog maker.
12:00- Had to go all the way over to the bookstore to get change from the cash register for the concession stand.
12:15- Called mom...she didn't answer me :(
12:20-12:30- Microwaved some pretzels for customers.
12:41- Checked Facebook.
1:09- New Text.
1:20- Mom called back as I walked back to my room to take a nap after working my shift.
3:31- Woke up from my nap because my friend called me.
4:08- Checked email and blackboard on my computer.
5:00- Swiped OneCard to get dinner at the Great Room.
5:10- New Text.
6:12- Worked on computer. Finished collage!
7:20- Called my friend from home.
7:40- Worked on my computer.
8:43- Called my friend again.
10:01- Checked Facebook.
10:02-10:10- Texted my mom.
10:14- Set alarm for tomorrow.
10:20- Played Bejeweled.
8:00 a.m.- Woke up to alarm.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Scan Art

Experimental Scans 


 Balloon Weight


Mardi Gras Beads


Biology Book 


Crazy Earrings 


Earrings


Elephant


Moving Elephant


Flower Lights


Moving Biology Book


Peacock Feather


Purse Pattern


Stars 


Kleenex